by James Crowley

by Neil Dodson

Out of the box, the ASP.NET list controls (CheckBoxList, RadioButtonList, DropDownList) only support data binding on a single field. Learn how to work around this to bind to as many fields as you need.

by James Crowley

by James Crowley

If you're targeting Windows Vista and your application requires administrator priviledges (such as accessing the program files directory), then it will fail unless you include a manifest so Windows knows. Here's how.

by Fernando Sanchez

by Salman Zafar

This sample code shows how to use the iText library to generate PDF files on the fly. The iText classes are very useful for people who need to generate read-only, platform independent documents containing text, lists, tables and images.

by Chris Buske

by Sean Brady

This is an Access 2003 project file that demonstrates how to do a few cool things with documents. You can grab the project file (zipped) from here:
http://www.guardianbob.com/support/public_files/DocumentStorageTest.zip
This project will show you how to store and retrieve documents from both an Access table with a BLOB field as well as a SharePoint list (via linked tables and the list web service).

by Guy Peled

by Guy Peled

Visual WebGui is not just another AJAX framework but rather a different approach to web application development, specially designed to simplify building highly complex applications like Outlook Web Access (OWA). Visual WebGui makes it possible for developers to create applications that were previously developed only by the "big guys".

by

by Craig Murphy

The support for lists in C# 2.0 makes sorting and searching very easy. This code snippet demonstrates how to create a list of Person objects (with name and age attributes), sort by name, sort by age and search based on age.

by Hari K

This function is used for VB.Net developers. It is useful for Date validate when the date format is "dd/MM/yyyy" or "dd/MMM/yyyy". Time validation is also useful for Validating the given time in the format of "HH:mm:ss"

by Xavier Larrea

The using statement in the c# language allows us to define an scope for an object lifetime. This statement obtains the resource specified, executes the statements and finally calls the Dispose() method of the object to clean it up.